The Al-Falah University JeM module investigation has crossed every red line. Three more doctors linked to the institution were arrested on Friday. This brings the total to six faculty members now in custody.

All are linked to the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terror cell responsible for the Red Fort car bomb that killed 13 people. Moreover, another 22 doctors, mostly Kashmiri, are under active NIA surveillance.
6 Faculty Members Now in Custody
The newest arrests have shattered the university’s claim that the terror link was isolated.
The latest detainees are:
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Dr. Mohammad (Faculty, Al-Falah School of Medical Sciences)
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Dr. Mustakim (Faculty, Al-Falah School of Medical Sciences)
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Dr. Jahnisar Alam (A recent intern)
All three were detained in Nuh, Haryana. Call records link them directly to Dr. Muzammil Ganaie, the module’s alleged leader. Ganaie’s flat contained the 2,900 kg explosives cache and JeM communication devices.
Sources also link the trio to Dr. Shaheen Sayeed. She is the female faculty member accused of running JeM’s women’s wing, Jamaat-ul-Mominaat, from inside the campus.
University Exposed for Widespread Academic Fraud
As the terror probe deepens, the university is also collapsing under criminal fraud charges. The Delhi Police Crime Branch has registered two new FIRs against Al-Falah University and its trustees.
The charges include:
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IPC Section 420 (Cheating)
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IPC Sections 467, 468, 471 (Forgery)
The FIRs allege the university displayed fake NAAC accreditation and fabricated UGC compliance certificates on its official website to cheat students.
The timeline of this fraud is damning:
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Nov 13: NAAC issues a public show-cause notice.
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Nov 14: The university quietly removes the fake credentials.
The fallout was swift. The Association of Indian Universities (AIU) has revoked Al-Falah’s membership. The National Medical Commission (NMC) has also cancelled the registration of four of the detained doctors.
A History of Fraud and Foreign Funding
This pattern of deception is part of the university’s foundation.
Al-Falah was founded in 1997 by the Al-Falah Charitable Trust. Its leaders, the Siddiqui family, had previously spent years in Tihar Jail for running a massive “halal investment” Ponzi scheme that looted billions from the Muslim community.
After their release, they rebranded as education entrepreneurs. They secured 78 acres of land in Faridabad and began aggressive fundraising in Gulf countries
The Arab Funding and “Kashmir Quota”
Donors from Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Qatar pumped crores into the project for “Muslim minority education.”
Instead, intelligence agencies now describe the campus as a “safe haven” for the Al-Falah University JeM module.
The investigation has also uncovered:
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An undeclared “Kashmir quota” operating since 2014, filling MBBS seats with students from the Valley, some with scrubbed police records.
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Alleged misuse of university labs (bought with foreign funds) to experiment with explosive precursors.
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The fact that the Red Fort bomb car (i20) was parked inside the campus for eleven consecutive days.
Money meant for Muslim upliftment was, therefore, allegedly diverted to incubate “white-coat jihadis” for Pakistani handlers.
The Cover-Up Collapses
The university’s leadership is now cornered by its own lies.
Vice-Chancellor Prof. Bhupinder Kaur Anand issued a statement on Nov 13. She claimed “only two” employees were involved and that labs were “solely for academic purposes.”
This statement collapsed within 48 hours. The arrest of three more faculty members and the collection of 40 forensic samples from those same labs proved her claims false.
A full-scale, multi-agency crackdown is now underway:
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The NIA has taken the terror case under the UAPA.
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The Enforcement Directorate (ED) is tracing the foreign funding trail.
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The Haryana government has ordered a complete administrative and financial audit.
Al-Falah University is not a victim. It is a calculated betrayal of its community and the country. Calls for its immediate closure, the seizure of its assets, and the freezing of its foreign accounts are growing louder.


